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- Title: Foundation Course: Lecture 3: Theoretical Thinking and Living in the Spirit.
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- Just think how vague, how uncertain an experience would be to presume it could perhaps be more succinctly formulated in order to solve the problem. One could even make references to this in our domain. In our domain another kind of domain has arisen out of Anthroposophic foundations where something similar has happened as what is meant with this point, if I understand it correctly. This is in the domain of social thinking. Something like a unified thought has come about, I could say, in the domain of the Threefold social organism. Firstly, I only want to make characteristic comparisons. I must confess this example doesn’t show anything significant when it appears publicly in such a short formulation. In life such short formulations don’t prove to be really effective; having a decisive importance. I always encounter an objection for instance when someone says: You want to tell me something about the human organism, and instead of giving me a uniform idea, you present an entire physiology. — One must try and understand how the doubt-free comfortable thoughts of modern time have contributed largely to our unhappiness and inner and outer relationships, and what we are suffering from is based on the vague manner of our desire to understand everything in a summary. One has to say to oneself: precisely because such ideas arise, proves that something must change when things happen, which many expect in a vague way. In particular, when it is then said, instead of such “uniform ideas.” instead of “mighty soul feelings,” a number of exercises are given, some of them could be of a moral nature — and others — they are called “occult” in the letter, which makes an unusual, thoughtful impression on others — yes, it must even be said: What can one then actually expect? — One can expect that there will simply be a debate about what current humanity is missing. I’m speaking firstly in this way, how in the anthroposophical domain it is by all means necessary; w!
- All these things should stop in the old thinking’s comfortable way. Those who don’t drop this comfortable thinking — they would also have the vague feeling that something must change — they can’t be informed about the demands of the time because everything which exists in the demands of the time is something which they are unable to experience; they can’t, because they are merely taught that these demands must be experienced basically as they have always been, and not commit to actually moving to solutions which must be investigated to really meet the demands of the time. Often the enormous difference between theoretical thought and immersed-in-spirit-living, is not considered. However, already during the first step into spiritual science there must be a living-within- the-spirit. I’m not saying you need to be clairvoyant or something of the kind, but that there needs to be a living-in-spirit; there must be another form of experience of truth, of content, than what one is accustomed to these days.
- Title: Foundation Course: Lecture 14: Gnostics and Montanists
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- At first it was a question of arranging the whole in a kind of vague form, always envisioning the side of the outside world, for there had to be someone like a Carolus Magnus, who on the one hand was a worldly administrator, and who could transfer the state administration of morality to the crown of the emperor as an outward gesture, while the church worked in the background. It was imagined in such a way, I could say, that it became a kind of moral dilemma, a conscience that has become historical. This started in the 9th, 10th centuries and this inner conscience steered towards people looking at the world, and that man, because he stood in the middle of the search for the divine in the moral, didn’t manage it in the world and searched for the enemies in the world which he felt within. Man looked in the world to find enemies. This resulted in the danger of Christians looking for enemies in the outer world, this led, my dear friends, to the mood of the crusades.
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